Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Over 4000 firms get US$1,7bn auction funds

- Golden Sibanda

Mthan 4 000 firms have beneORE fited under the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe’s ( RBZ) weekly foreign exchange auction system since its inception in July 2020, while over US$ 1.7 billion has been disbursed to importers via the auction platform, the bank’s Governor said.

The disburseme­nts have benefited in excess of 1 728 entities, with US$ 1, 734 billion allotted under the main foreign exchange auction while 3 588 small to medium enterprise­s received a cumulative US$ 234 million under the SMEs foreign exchange auction.

The bulk of the auction funds (60 percent), the central bank said, went towards payment for raw materials ( US$ 794.7 million), machinery and equipment ( US$ 382.5 million) and 40 percent was alloted for importatio­n of consumable­s, pharmaceut­icals and other critical needs of the economy.

“The auction system has so far covered and benefited almost every facet of the economy, from, inter a lia , individual­s’ needs for educationa­l fees, SMEs’ requiremen­ts for capital and raw materials and primary producers’ capital requiremen­ts,” Dr Mangudya said.

“The auction has had a bigger footprint in the economy as more than 4000 entities have accessed foreign currency through allotment of US$ 1.7 billion at the main auction and US$ 233.8 million at the SMEs (small to medium) auction.

Reserve Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya said Zimbabwe had made payments amounting to US$ 4 billion between January and August 2021, with the weekly auction accounting for a significan­t chunk of the offshore payments due to its wider coverage.

A breakdown of the payments made outside the country shows that foreign currency accounts ( FCAs) accounted for

US$ 2,458 billion, the interbank market ( US$ 246 million while the apex bank’s foreign exchange auction system chipped in with US$ 1, 340 billion.

Fundamenta­ls for the economy, including external sector performanc­e, were better than a long time in history, Dr Mangudya said, with the country’s economy expected to bulk 7,8 percent this year, which the central bank chief noted was the fastest of all peers in the region.

The Governor said Zimbabwe’s economy was being driven by strong agricultur­al output in 2021, which saw record grain production, attractive global mineral prices for gold, platinum and nickel among others and massive constructi­on across the country.

In fact, East Africa’s Djibouti, driven by recovery of port activities and perk up in global demand, at 8,1 percent, might be the only African country to grow faster than Zimbabwe this year, according to an earlier forecast by pan-Africa lender, African Developmen­t Bank AfDB).

The sustained growth trajectory dovetails into Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube’s mid term budget review projection that the economy would this year expand by 7,8 percent, 0,4 percentage points better than his initial forecast.

Strict adherence to fiscal budgets, which this year earmarked 30 percent of the total purse for capital projects, has allowed the Treasury to channel significan­t tax revenues towards funding key projects like dams, roads, bridges and other public infrastruc­ture.

Coupled with strong output from agricultur­e, manufactur­ing and mineral exports, Zimbabwe’s economy has responded positively and is poised to record its first major growth following two years of successive decline, first due to drought and cyclones and the negative impact of Covid-19.

Dr Mangudya said in an interview yesterday Zimbabwe’s economy was on the right growth trajectory, adding that the bulking growth was indisputab­le, as it was strongly backed by statistics extracted from the performanc­e of key economic fundamenta­ls.

Notably, both the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank issued statements confirming Zimbabwe’s economy was on the bounce, with the expecting

IMF annual growth of around 6 percent while the World Bank was more conservati­ve at 3,9 percent.

Widespread legislativ­e and economic reforms instituted by the Government have also started paying dividends through falling inflation, stable exchange rate, recurring budget surpluses and generally stable and predictabl­e macro-economic environmen­t.

The central bank chief said even output from key productive sectors was on an upward trend spurred by improved access to affordable foreign currency for key imports, which saw cumulative payments of US$ 4 billion in the period January to August, 2021.

“Zimbabwe’s growth is higher than most countries in SADC. Zimbabwe is on a growth trajectory that no one can dispute unless they challenge it from an uninformed position. Objectivel­y, the economy is growing, but we are not saying there is no poverty,” he said.

Dr Mangudya said that the only concern about Zimbabwe’s strong economic performanc­e was the fact that the growth was not yet inclusive, however, noting even in developed countries like China, Britain and the US, one could always find very poor people.

The Southern African country’s economy had suffered from nearly two decades of malaise, which may need a longer to redress before the growth can cascade to the lowest ebb of society and be felt by the vast majority of citizens in the lowest social stratum.

“People should not confuse growth with poverty. What it simply means is that the growth is not (yet) inclusive,” he said. Dr Mangudya said that the many companies that have reported strong positive performanc­es were testimony to the growing economy.

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